Our Redemption
Redemption Means
Marred Hands Settled the Issue
Winston Churchill
Sing Redeemed
The Lost Boat
Resources
The Mediator
Topic : Redemption
Redemption Defined
The word means to buy back by paying a price, and set free
1. Mans ruin Isaiah 52:3; John 8:34; Rom. 6:20
2. Mans helplessness Psalm 49:7; Micah 6:7
3. A redeemer provided Job 33:24; Psalm 111:9
4. Redemption by blood Eph. 1:7; Acts 20:28; Heb. 9:12
5. Redemption by power Eph. 1:13-14; 4:30; Rom. 8:23
6. Redemption from iniquity Titus 2:14; 1 Peter 1:18
7. Redemption from the curse Gal. 3:3; Psalm 103:4
8. Redemption of the body Rom. 8:23; Phil. 3:20
Our Redemption
- Was obtained for us, at the cross Heb. 9:12
- Was sent to us, in the gospel Psalm 111:9
- Is known by us, in the present 1 Cor. 1:30
- Will be accomplished in us, in the future Rom. 8:23
Redemption Means
Redemption means to free someone from bondage. It often involves the paying of a ransom, a price that makes redemption possible. The Israelites were redeemed from Egypt. We were redeemed from the power of sin and the curse of the Law (Gal. 3:13) through Jesus (Rom. 3:24; Col. 1:14). We were bought with a price (1 Cor. 6:20; 7:23).
Situation | Interpretation | Reference |
Slave Market | World System | 1 John 5:19 |
Slave Master | Satan | John 12:31 |
Slaves | Humanity | Ephesians 2:2-3 |
The Problem | Sin | Colossians 2:14 |
Highest Bidder | Jesus Christ | Hebrews 2:14-15 |
Ransom Price | Blood of Christ | 1 Peter 1:18-19 |
- lutroo = Emphasis on freedom
- peripoiep = Emphasis on being Gods possession
- agoradzo = Emphasis on the place of slavery
- exagoradzo = Emphasis on permanence of freedom
- One animal sacrifice per man, Genesis 3
- One sacrifice per family, Exodus 12:3-14
- One sacrifice per nationTabernacle in wildernessDay of atonement
- One sacrifice per world, John 1:29, Heb 10:1-14
Originally, the payment of a price to secure the release of a prisoner of war. The word came to be used also of the release of a slave, and sometimes of a person under sentence of death (Exod. 21:28-30). Redemption always means the payment of a price to secure release. People who sin become slaves of sin (John 8:34); they cannot free themselves from that slavery. Christs death on the cross was the payment of a ransom price (Mark 10:45) by which sinners are set free. Now that they are redeemed they must live as free people (1 Cor. 6:19-20; Gal. 5:1).
Marred Hands Settled the Issue
The price Jesus paid for our redemption was terrible indeed. When we think of the extreme suffering He endured to purchase our freedom from sins penalty, our hearts should overflow with love for Him. Leslie B. Flynn told a story that illustrates this truth.
An orphaned boy was living with his grandmother when their house caught fire. The grandmother, trying to get upstairs to rescue the boy, perished in the flames. The boys cries for help were finally answered by a man who climbed an iron drainpipe and came back down with the boy hanging tightly to his neck.
Several weeks later, a public hearing was held to determine who would receive custody of the child. A farmer, a teacher, and the towns wealthiest citizen all gave the reasons they felt they should be chosen to give the boy a home. But as they talked, the lads eyes remained focused on the floor. Then a stranger walked to the front and slowly took his hands from his pockets, revealing severe scars on them. As the crowd gasped, the boy cried out in recognition. This was the man who had saved his life. His hands had been burned when he climbed the hot pipe. With a leap the boy threw his arms around the mans neck and held on for dear life. The other men silently walked away, leaving the boy and his rescuer alone. Those marred hands had settled the issue.
Many voices are calling for our attention. Among them is the One whose nail-pierced hands remind us that He has rescued us from sin and its deadly consequences. To Him belongs our love and devotion. -D.C.E.
Winston Churchill
A wealthy English family once invited friends to spend some time at their beautiful estate. The happy gathering was almost plunged into a terrible tragedy on the first day. When the children went swimming, one of them got into deep water and was drowning. Fortunately, the gardener heard the others screaming and plunged into the pool to rescue the helpless victim. That youngster was Winston Churchill. His parents, deeply grateful to the gardener, asked what they could do to reward him. He hesitated, then said, “I wish my son could go to college someday and become a doctor.†“We’ll pay his way,†replied Churchill’s parents.
Years later when Sir Winston was prime minister of England, he was stricken with pneumonia. Greatly concerned, the king summoned the best physician who could be found to the bedside of the ailing leader. That doctor was Sir Alexander Fleming, the developer of penicillin. He was also the son of that gardener who had saved Winston from drowning as a boy! Later Churchill said, “Rarely has one man owed his life twice to the same person.â€
What was rare in the case of that great English statesman is in a much deeper sense a wonderful reality for every believer in Christ. The Heavenly Father has given us the gift of physical life, and then through His Son, the Great Physician, He has imparted to us eternal life.
May the awareness that we are doubly indebted to God as our Creator and Redeemer motivate us to present our bodies a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable unto Him. - D.J.D.
Sing Redeemed
A story told by Paul Lee Tan illustrates the meaning of redemption:
When A. J. Gordon was pastor of a church in Boston, he met a young boy in front of the sanctuary carrying a rusty cage in which several birds fluttered nervously. Gordon inquired, Son, where did you get those birds?
The boy replied, I trapped them out in the field.
What are you going to do with them?
Im going to play with them, and then I guess Ill just feed them to an old cat we have at home.
Gordon offered to buy them, and the lad exclaimed, Mister, you dont want them, theyre just little old wild birds and cant sing very well.
Gordon replied, Ill give you $2 for the cage and the birds.
Okay, its a deal, but youre making a bad bargain.
The exchange was made and the boy went away whistling, happy with his shiny coins. Gordon walked around to the back of the church property, opened the door of the small wire coop, and let the struggling creatures soar into the blue.
The next Sunday he took the empty cage into the pulpit and used it to illustrate his sermon about Christs coming to seek and to save the lostpaying for them with His own precious blood. That boy told me the birds were not songsters, said Gordon, but when I released them and they winged their way heavenward, it seemed to me they were singing, Redeemed, redeemed, redeemed!
You and I have been held captive to sin, but Christ has purchased our pardon and set us at liberty. When a person has this life-changing experience, he will want to sing, Redeemed, Redeemed, Redeemed!
The Lost Boat
Tom carried his new boat to the edge of the river. He carefully placed it in the water and slowly let out the string. How smoothly the boat sailed! Tom sat in the warm sunshine, admiring the little boat that he had built. Suddenly a strong current caught the boat. Tom tried to pull it back to shore, but the string broke. The little boat raced downstream.
Tom ran along the sandy shore as fast as he could. But his little boat soon slipped out of sight. All afternoon he searched for the boat. Finally, when it was too dark to look any longer, Tom sadly went home.
A few days later, on the way home from school, Tom spotted a boat just like his in a store window. When he got closer, he could seesure enoughit was his!
Tom hurried to the store manager: Sir, thats my boat in your window! I made it!
Sorry, son, but someone else brought it in this morning. If you want it, youll have to buy it for one dollar.
Tom ran home and counted all his money. Exactly one dollar! When he reached the store, he rushed to the counter. Heres the money for my boat. As he left the store, Tom hugged his boat and said, Now youre twice mine. First, I made you and now I bought you.
Resources
- Jesus the Savior, I. H. Marshall, IVP, 1990, pp. 239ff.
- Wake Up Calls, Ron Hutchcraft, Moody, 1990, p.22.
- Max Anders, Jesus, Knowing Our Savior, (Nashville, Thomas Nelson Publ., 1995), pp. 80-82.
The Mediator
The redeemed are dependent on God for all. All that we havewisdom, the pardon of sin, deliverance, acceptance in Gods favor, grace, holiness, true comfort and happiness, eternal life and glorywe have from God by a Mediator; and this Mediator is God. God not only gives us the Mediator, and accepts His mediation, and of His power and grace bestows the things purchased by the Mediator, but He is the Mediator. Our blessings are what we have by purchase; and the purchase is made of God; the blessings are purchased of Him; and not only so, but God is the purchaser. Yes, God is both the purchaser and the price; for Christ, who is God, purchased these blessings by offering Himself as the price of our salvation.